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Discuss Capital Punishment Existing In Various Legal System Of World

Author: Nilesh Kumar Baghel, Semester VI, Hidayatullah National Law University, Raipur

INTRODUCTION
The debate over the death penalty has in the recent past acquired renewed vigor. The government
of the day has been insisting on the increased use of death penalty for crimes other than murder,
particularly rape. Certain womens groups have welcomed this. The judiciary too has been
awarding the death penalty for violent crimes with increased regularity. When the designated
court that tried the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case recommended death penalty to all the 26
accused arraigned before it, it was time for the abolitionists to once again hold a banner of
protest. Despite being party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
that requires a progression towards abolition of death penalty, India appears to be heading the
other way.
After tracing the judicial decisions which upheld the constitutionality of the death penalty, and
the evolution of the rarest of rare test in the landmark Bachan Singh case, I propose to examine
how that test has been applied by the court in subsequent cases. The non-adherence to the
mandatory procedural requirement of a pre-sentenc- ing hearing, the real possibility of the wrong
person being convicted, the uncertainty of executive clemency, the domination of the debate by
retentionists since Bachan Singh are some of the contexts in which it is proposed to examine the
justication for retention of death penalty as a form of punishment.
The need to revisit the contention that death penalty is a cruel punishment is inspired by two
recent developments in the international sphere. The rst is the judgment in 1995 of the South
African Constitutional Court, declaring death penalty to be a cruel and inhuman punishment and
therefore unconstitutional. This despite strong public opinion to the contrary. The second is the
signing by 120 countries of the statute creating the International Criminal Court, which was
rejected the death penalty as a punishment for genocide, crimes against humanity and war
crimes.
Finally, it is perhaps apposite to recapture the spirit of non-violence that fosters reconciliation
while not com- promising on truth. There is also a need to recognise the limitations of a judicial
system that may be concerned only with what Albie Sachs calls the microscopic truth. It is
1

never too late to realise the importance that a reformative theory of punishment has for lasting
peace.

HISTORY OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT OR DEATH


PENALTY
Capital punishment or death sentence has been an accepted form of justice through the ages.
Geography, culture and passing of time have varied its form, and the offences for which it has
been imposed, and its recipients.
The imposition of death penalty in India appears to go back to ancient times. In eras of epics and
medieval history, the monarch of land was the head of the criminal justice system, who, sitting in
his royal court, heard both sides of a case, be it civil or criminal, dispensed justice, and awarded
punishment or other dispensations by royal decree. Invariably, crimes against the crown drew a
death sentence which was quickly implemented by beheading.
The first death sentence historically recorded occurred in 16th Century BC Egypt, where the
wrongdoer, a member of the nobility, was accused of magic, and ordered to take his own life.
During this period, commoners were usually executed with the axe.
In the 14th Century BC, the Hittite Code also prescribed the death penalty. The 7th Century BC
Draconian Code of Athens made death the penalty for almost every crime committed. In the 5th
Century BC, the Roman law of the Twelve Tablets codified the death penalty. Again, the method
of execution of the death penalty was different for nobility, freemen and slaves.
Death was often cruel, and the methods of execution induced crucification, drowning at sea,
burial alive, beating to death, and impalement. The most notorious example of death sentence
that took place before the Christian era was about 399 BC when the Greek philosopher Socrates
was required to drink poison for the crime of heresy and corruption of youth.

Constitutional Validity of Capital Punishment


S.367 (5) of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, prior to its amendment in 1955, required a court
sentencing a person convicted of an offence punishable with death to a punishment other than
death to state the reasons why it was not awarding death sentence. The amendment deleted this
provision but there was no indication in either the Cr.PC or the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC) as
to which cases called for life imprisonment and which the alternative death penalty. The Law
Commission of India in 1967 undertook a study of death penalty and submitted its 35th Report to
the government. It justied its conclusion for retention of death penalty thus:1
Having regard to the conditions in India, to the variety of social upbringing of its inhabitants,
to the disparity in the level of morality and education in the country, to the vastness of its area, to
the diversity of its population and to the paramount need for maintaining law and order in the
country at the present juncture, India cannot risk the experiment of abolition of capital
punishment.

Jagmohan
If the extinguishments of life through a judicial sentence could be brought about by the
combination of a substantive and a procedural penal law, the rst attack of the abolitionist had to
be upon the validity of such a law. A Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court repelled the initial
challenge to the constitutionality of death penalty as a form of punishment in Jagmohan Singh v.
State of U.P2. On behalf those facing the death penalty it was contended that death sentence
extinguishes all the freedoms guaranteed under article 19 (1) (a) to (g) and was accordingly
unreasonable and not in public interest. Secondly, the discretion vested in judges to award either
of the two punishments was not based on any legislative policy or standard or constituted an
1 35th Report of the Law Commission of India, p.354.
2 (1973) 1 SCC 20
3

abdication by the legislature of its essential function attracting the vice of excessive delegation.
Thirdly, the unguided sentencing discretion in judges rendered it violative of article 14 since two
persons found guilty of murder could be treated differently one sentenced to life the other to
death. Fourthly, there was no procedure provided in the Cr.PC for determining which of the two
punishments were to be awarded. The absence of a procedure established by law under which
life could be extinguished resulted in a violation of article 21.
The ve judges refused to be persuaded by the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in Furman v.
Georgia3 declaring death penalty to be in violation of the Eighth Amendment, which forbade
cruel and unusual punishments. Expressing doubts about transplanting western experience the
court felt that social conditions are different and so also the general intellectual level.4 In
coming to the conclusion that capital punishment was neither unreasonable nor opposed to public
interest, the court drew support from the 35th Report of the Law Commission and the fact that on
four occasions between 1956 and 1962 bills or resolutions tabled in Parliament for abolition of
death penalty had been rejected. Negativing the argument of excessive delegation the court
opined: The impossibility of laying down standards is at the very core of the criminal law as
administered in India which invests the judges with a very wide discretion in the matter of xing
the degree of punishment. The discretion... is liable to be corrected by superior courts. As
regards the procedure, the accused could always ask to lead additional evidence and counsel
could address the court on the question of sentence. It was held that deprivation of life was
constitutionally permissible as it was imposed after a trial in accordance with procedure
established by law.

Bachan Singh
Three developments subsequent to the judgment in Jagmohan prompted a renewed challenge in
Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab5 to the constitutional validity of the death penalty. The Cr.PC
was reenacted in 1973 and section 354 (3) required that the judgment recording conviction for an
3 33 L Ed 2d 346
4 Ibid
5 1980 (2) SCC 684.
4

offence punishable with death shall state special reasons for such sentence.6 Thus death sentence
became the exception and not the rule as far as punishment for murder was concerned.
Secondly, the decision in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India7, required that every of law of
punitive detention both in its procedural and substantial aspects must past test of reasonableness
on a collective reading of articles 21, 19 and 14. Based on this interpretation, the Supreme Court
had in Rajendra Prasad v. State of U.P.8 held that the special reasons necessary for imposing the
death penalty must relate not to the crime but the criminal. It could be awarded only if the
security of the state and society, public order and the interests of the general public compelled
that course. When Bachan Singhs appeal came up for hearing in the Supreme Court before a
bench of Sarkaria and Kailasam, JJ., the latter observed that the judgment of the majority in
Rajendra Prasad ran counter to the judgment in Jagmohan and hence required reconsideration.
The third development was that India had acceded to the ICCPR that came into force on
December 16, 1976.9
By ratifying the treaty, India had committed itself to the progressive abolition of death penalty.
In support of the rst limb of the challenge, to the validity of s.302 IPC, it was argued for the
abolitionists in Bachan Singh that:

6 The Joint Committee of Parliament in its Report stated the object and reason of making the change, as follows: A
sentence of death is the extreme penalty of law and it is but fair that when a court awards that sentence in a case
where the alternative sentence of life imprisonment is also available, it should give special reasons in support of the
sentence.

7 1978 (2) SCR 621.


8 (1979) 3 SCC 646.

9 Article 6 (2) ICCPR: In countries which have not abolished the death penalty, sentence of death may be imposed
only for the most serious crimes in accordance with the law in force at the time of the commission of the crime and
not contrary to the provisions of the present Covenant and to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide. This penalty can only be carried out pursuant to a final judgment rendered by a competent
court.

(a) death penalty was irreversible and could be, given the fallibility of the processes of law, inicted upon innocent persons;
(b) there was no convincing evidence that the death penalty served any penological purpose
- its deterrence remained unproved, retribution was no longer an acceptable end of punishment
and reformation of the criminal and his rehabilitation was the primary purpose of punishment;
(c) execution by whatever means for whatever the offence was a cruel, inhuman and degrading
punishment.
The majority of four judges in Bachan Singh negatived the challenge to the constitutionality of
death penalty, afrmed the decision in Jagmohan and overruled Rajendra Prasad in so far as it
sought to restrict the imposition of death penalty only to cases where the security of the state and
society, public order and the interests of the general public were threatened.10
The Court continued to draw support from the Law Commissions 35th Report. The fact that
there was, among rational persons, a deep division of opinion on this issue, was itself, according
to the court, a ground for rejecting the argument that retention of the penalty was totally devoid
of reason and purpose. The perceived majority view supporting retention meant that death
penalty as an alternative punishment was neither unreason- able nor lacking in public interest.
The court rejected the second limb of the challenge to the validity of section 354 (3) of Cr.PC on
the ground that it permitted imposition of death penalty in an arbitrary and whimsical manner. It
explained that the requirement under section 235 (2) for a pre-sentence hearing of the accused
coupled with the requirement that the sentence of death had to be conrmed by the High Court
under section 366 (2) of the Cr.PC, meant that errors in the exercise of the judicial discretion
could be corrected by the superior courts.
Although the court was not inclined to lay down standards or norms for guiding the exercise of
judicial discre- tion, it accepted the suggestions of the amicus curiae11 as to what could generally

10 The dissenting opinion of Bhagwati. J, (as he then was) is reported in Bachan Singh v. State ofPunjab (1982) 3
SCC 24.

constitute aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The court recorded the following possible
aggravating circumstances suggested by the amicus curiae:
(a) murder committed after previous planning and involves extreme brutality; or
(b) murder involving exceptional depravity; or
(c) murder of a member of any of the armed forces or of any police force or of any public servant and committed:
i) while such member of public servant was on duty; or
ii) in consequence of anything done or attempted to be done by such member or public servant
in the lawful discharge of his duty
Among the mitigating factors suggested by the amicus curiae were:
1. An offence committed under the inuence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance.
2. The age of the accused. If the accused was young or old, he was not to be sentenced to death.
3. The probability that the accused would not commit criminal acts of violence as would constitute a continuing threat to society.
4. The probability that the accused could be reformed and rehabilitated. The state was to prove
by evidence that the accused did not satisfy the conditions (3) and (4) above.
5. The accused believed that he was morally justied in committing the offence.
6. The accused acted under the duress or domination of another person.
7. The accused was mentally defective and that the said defect impaired his capacity to
appreciate the criminality of his conduct.
The court termed these euphemistically as indicators and relevant circumstances attitude
required to be accepted. It, however, indicated that these were not exhaustive and that the court
did not want to be seen as fettering judicial discretion in the matter of sentencing.
11 Dr.Y.S.Chitale, Senior Advocate
7

The concluding remarks in the majority opinion marked the real shift in the judicial attitude
towards sentencing. It also reected the changing perceptions of the judiciary inuenced as it
was by major strides in human rights jurisprudence. The majority said: A real and abiding
concern for the dignity of human life postulates resistance to taking a life through laws
instrumentality. That ought not to be done save in the rarest of rare cases when the alternative
option is unquestionably foreclosed.

Macchi Singh
12

In Machhi Singh v. State of Punjab the court summarised the propositions emanating from
Bachan Singh and spelt out the task for the sentencing judge. It said:
A balance-sheet of aggravating and mitigating circumstances has to be drawn up and in doing so
the mitigating circumstances have to be accorded full weightage and a just balance has to be
struck between the aggravating and the mitigating circumstances before the option is exercised.
The court then explained how it envisaged the guidelines would apply. The questions that the
sentencing court had to ask were:
(a) Is there something uncommon about the crime, which renders sentence of imprisonment for
life inadequate and calls for a death sentence?
(b) Are the circumstances of the crime such that there is no alternative but to impose death
sentence even after according maximum weightage to the mitigating circumstances, which speak
in favour of the offender?
Thus both in Jagmohan and Bachan Singh, the court bowed to legislative wisdom and shrank
away from strik- ing down the death penalty. But the similarity in the two decisions ended there.
The change brought about by Bachan Singh, as explained by Machhi Singh, was signicant.
There was an afrmation that death penalty was the exception and not the rule. There was an
afrmation that death penalty was the exception and not the rule. The formulation of the rarest of
rare test, credited craftily by the court, still shy of being accused of legislating, to the amicus
curiae who assisted it, acknowledgment of reformation and rehabilitation of the delinquent as
one goal of punishment. It cannot be gainsaid that the rate of imposition of death penalty would
12 (1983) 3 SCC 470
8

denitely have been higher but for Bachan Singh. In retrospect, Bachan Singh was neither a
small nor insignicant achieve- ment for the abolitionists.
Bachan Singh also showed abolitionists that the challenge to the constitutionality of the death
penalty was not a one-time exercise and had to be revived at regular intervals. Perhaps taking a
cue, the challenge was renewed, albeit unsuccessfully, in Shashi Nayar v. Union of India.13 The
petitioner requested reconsideration of Jagmohan and Bachan Singh on the ground that both
those decisions were based on the 1967 report of the Law Commission which did not reect
current reality. However, the court was unmoved. It took judicial notice of the fact that the
law and order situation in the country has not only not improved since 1967 but has deteriorated
over the years and is fast worsening today.14 It was rm that the present is, therefore, the most
inopportune time to reconsider the law on the subject. It perhaps this continuing perception of a
real link between rising crime rate the severity of the punishment, the former justifying the latter,
that is the real stumbling block in the re-examination of the necessity for retention.

13 (1992) 1 SCC 96. The petitioners husband was convicted for the murder of his father and
stepbrother. The petition was filed after his mercy petitions had been rejected first by the
President of India and then by the Governor of Jammu and Kashmir.
14 Ibid
9

Applying the Test of Rarest of Rare


Machhi Singh requires the trying court to draw up a balance sheet of the aggravating and
mitigating circum- stances and opt for the maximum penalty only if even after giving the
maximum weightage the mitigating circumstances, there is no alternative but to impose death
sentence. However on an analysis of the decisions handed down by the Supreme Court since
Bachan Singh, it appears that the exercise of balancing the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances is rarely performed.15 The reasons afforded by the court for either conrming
death sentence or commuting it appear to invariably turn on the nature of the crime or on the role
of the offender in the crime. The background of the offender and the possibility of his
reformation or rehabilitation is seldom accounted for.16

Dispensability as a Special Reason


Kuljeet Singh v. Union of India17 was a decision rendered in a writ petition by the accused
Ranga and Billa after their special leave petitions were dismissed by the Supreme Court. They
were sentenced to death for killing a teenaged girl and her younger brother after giving them a
lift in their stolen car while moving in the roads of Delhi. The court found that the death of the
children was as a result of savage planning which bore a professional stamp. It said: The

15 A notable exception is the decision in Anshad v. State of Karnataka (1994) 4 SCC 381 where
the Supreme Court commuted the death sentence awarded to three persons by the High Court on
a reversal of acquittal. The Supreme Court held that the reasons given by the High Court without
balancing the aggravating and mitigating circumstances were not special reasons contemplated
by law.
16 The cases that follow are only illustrative
17 (1981) 3 SCC 324
10

survival of an orderly society demands the extinction of the life of persons like Ranga and Billa
who are a menace to social order and security.18
In another instance, the Supreme Court was dismayed that the sentencing court had adopted a not
too serious approach in deciding whether the accused deserved to die. The Sessions Judge had
observed in his order that the accused has committed a terric double murder and so no
sympathy can be shown to him.19 The Supreme Court disapproved of this and said:20
The reasons given by the learned Sessions Judge for imposing the death sentence are not special
reasons within the meaning of s. 354(3).... and we are not sure whether, if he was cognisant of
his high responsibility under that provision, he would have necessarily imposed the death
sentence.

Pardon Them, Not Hang Them

The decisions where death sentences have been commuted do not appear to be based on any set
pattern of sentencing. This deprives the decisions of real precedential value and necessitates
formulating arguments for mitigation of sentence not on the basis of past practice but restricted
to the facts of a case.
In Panchhi v. State of U.P.,21 four members of the family of the accused became killers of four
members of another family consequent upon a long history of quarrels. The accused made 27
attacks with axes and daranti on the deceased. The three surviving accused included a
septuagenarian, a youth in his prime age and a mother who had given birth to a child even while
undergoing the sentence. The death sentence awarded by the trial court was conrmed by the
18 A subsequent petition questioning the rejection of their mercy petition by the President was also dismissed: Kuljit
Singh v. Lt.Governor of Delhi (1982) 1 SCC 417.

19 Muniappan v. State of Tamil Nadu (1981) 3 SCC 11 at 15.


20
21 (1998) 7 SCC 177
11

High Court. The Supreme Court commuted the sentence for all the three stating: No doubt
brutality looms large in the murders in this case particularly of the old and also the tender age
child. It may be that the manner in which the killings were perpetrated may not by itself show
any lighter side but that is not very peculiar or very special in these killings. Brutality of the
manner in which a murder was perpetrated may be a ground but not the sole criterion for judging
whether the case is one of the rarest of rare cases.
Apart from mentioning that a thirst for retaliation was a possible motive for the crime, the Court
was totally silent on what mitigating factors had weighed with it.22
In Raja Ram Yadav v. State of Bihar23 where six murders had been committed in a cold diabolical
manner, the court commuted the sentence on the accused to life imprisonment on account of the
special fact that the sole eye witness to the crime was a child aged 9 years. This was an instance
where the court did not travel outside the record to seek factors that would weigh with it for a
decision on the appropriate sentence. An internal weakness in the evidence has sufcient for
mitigation of sentence, although not for the purposes of returning a nding of innocence.
In Major R.S.Budhwar v. Union of India24 the carrying out of two murders by subordinate army
personnel under orders of the superior ofcers was seen as not falling under the rarest of rare
category. The court pointed out that the accused had acted under dictation, surrendered within
two days of the commission of the offence and had spoken the truth in the form of confessions
that helped bring the superiors to book. However in Shankar v. State of Tamil Nadu25 the
confessions by the accused which led to the solving of the crime, did not help mitigate the death
sentence awarded to them.

22 The case attracted wide attention since one of those on death row was a woman with a
suckling child. Significantly, the Supreme Court rejected the plea of the National Commission
for Women for intervening in the case for the obvious reason that under the Code of Criminal
Procedure, the National Commission for Women or any other organisation cannot have locus
standi in this murder case. Supra note 38 at 180.
23 (1996) 9 SCC 287
24 (1996) 9 SCC 502
12

In Kishori v. State of Delhi,26 the appellant was the member of a riotous mob that went on a
rampage in Delhi following the assassination of prime minister Indira Gandhi on October 31,
1984. Thousands of Sikhs were done to death. The appellant was charged with having committed
the murder three named and several other unnamed Sikhs. The Supreme Court commuted the
death sentence. The factors that weighed with the court were that the appellant had been initially
convicted in seven cases but on appeal had been acquitted in four of them. Therefore it could not
be said that he was a hard-boiled criminal. None of the witnesses had stated that the appellant
was a leader of the mob or that he exhorted its members to do any particular act. It further
elaborated that the acts of the mob of which the appellant was a member cannot be stated to be
the result of any organisation or any group indulging in violent activities formed with any
purpose or scheme so as to call an organised activity. In that sense, we may say that the acts of
the mob of which the appellant was a member was only the result of a temporary frenzy.
In Ronny v. State of Maharashtra27 the three appellants were sentenced to death for the rape and
murder of married woman of 45 years who was a mother of two children as well as that of her
husband and son aged 17 years. In commuting the death sentences awarded to them the court
took into account that one of the perpetra- tors crime, which also involved robbery, was a
qualied civil engineer, married, having a son aged 4 years and parents living at the Spiritual
Life Centre, Narsapur for three decades. He was also the nephew of the woman who was raped
and murdered. Another had been awarded titles, Thaneshri and Vasaishri, for bodybuilding.
His was a love marriage against the wishes of both their parents and there was nobody to look
after their two daughters and two sons. The third accused had a sick father and no adverse
antecedents. The court held that offences could not be said to have been committed under the
inuence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance. The possibility of reform and
25 (1994) 4 SCC 478. Despite the principal accused giving copious details of the police officers
who aided him in his business of illicit liquor and prostitution, the court was not inclined to
direct the government to take action against the named officers even while it relied on that very
confession to find him and his brother guilty and sentence them to death.
26 (1999) 1 SCC 148
27 1998) 3 SCC 625

13

rehabilitation could not be ruled out. From the facts and circumstances it was not possible to
predict as to which among the three played which part. It was not possible to say whose case fell
within the rarest of rare cases.
The designated court that tried the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, found all the twenty-six arraigned before it to be guilty of, inter alia, committing terrorist acts as dened by Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (TADA).28 The court then recommended that each
of the twenty-six persons be sentenced to death. A perusal of the judgment reveals that the judge
did not give individual reasons for each of the accused but gave seven special reasons for all of
them. There was absolutely no mention of any balancing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances for each of the accused.29 Some of those special reasons were:30
1. Rajiv Gandhi, the former Prime Minister of India was brutally assassinated in pursuance of
diabolical plot carefully conceived and executed by a highly organised foreign terrorist
organisation, the LTTE, operating from a closed preserve cut off from the rest of the world.
2. Sixteen innocent lives were lost and many sustained grievous/simple injuries in the gruesome, inhuman, uncivilized and merciless bomb blast by an LTTE woman human bomb which
was successfully executed with the active help, assistance and participation of ac- cused who are
LTTE militants or its staunch supporters.
3. Nine police ofcers involving a Superintendent of Police, who were public servants and were
on security duty at Sriperumbudur lost their lives while on duty, in this most heinous and
gruesome crime perpetrated as a result of a pre-planned and premeditated conspiracy.
28 S.3 (1) TADA defines a terrorist act as an act done with an intent to (i) overawe the
government or (ii) to strike terror in people or (iii) to alienate any section of the people or (iv) to
adversely affect the harmony amongst different sections of the people.
29 Among the accused were five women. Four belonged to one family and there were three couples.One other
accused was a seventy-six year old man whose granddaughter was also an accused in the same case.

30 Unreported judgment dated January 28, 1998 of Judge Navaneetham, at 1625-26.

14

4. The brutal killings of Rajiv Gandhi brought the Indian democratic process to a grinding halt
in as much as the general election to the Lok Sabha and assemblies in some States had to be
postponed. Such was the impact and after effect of the killing of Rajiv Gandhi.
5. The victims were not in a position to protect themselves from the human bomb as the
terrorists intelligently and ingeniously used Dhanu as a human bomb.
6. For killing Rajiv Gandhi and others, some of the accused inltrated into India, clandestinely
and with the full support and participation of other accused who are local Tamils, this hei- nous
crime was committed by the LTTE militants.
7. Giving deterrent punishment alone can deter other potential offenders and in future dis- suade
our people from associating with any terrorist organisation to do such diabolical and heinous
crimes.
In the Supreme Court, nineteen of the twenty-six were found to be innocent of the offence of
murder and all of them of any TADA offence. Of the seven that were found guilty of the murder
charge, four including a woman Nalini, were sentenced to death. Of the three judges, who wrote
separate opinions, Thomas, J., felt that Nalini did not deserve the maximum penalty. The reasons
that weighed with him were that she was an elderly and educated woman; she was led into the
conspiracy by playing on her feminine sentiments; she played no dominating role; she was
persistently brainwashed by A-3 (Murugan) who became her husband and then the father of her
child; she was made to believe in the virtue of offering her help to the task undertaken by the
conspirators. Another consideration was that she was the mother of a little female child who had
to be saved from orphanhood.31
However, the other two judges, Wadhwa, J. and Quadri, J. were of the view that Nalini did not
deserve any leniency and the nal order was that she too be sentenced to death.32 While Thomas
J. dwelt on the mitigating circumstances for Nalini neither he nor the other judges considered
those that would be relevant for the other accused being awarded the death sentence. Adopting
the pattern followed by the trial court, they only recounted the aggravating circumstances
emanating from the crime itself.
31 State v. Nalini 1999 (3) SCALE 241 at 307.
15

The upshot of the discussion on the application of the rarest of rare test is that there is no
consistent or reliable pattern under which judges will exercise their discretion. The gnawing
uneasiness that the same case if heard by a different set of judges may have resulted in a different
punishment will always rankle in the minds of those successful death row convicts facing the
noose. One sure safeguard is the strict adherence to the pre-sentence hearing requirement. An
examination of the track record of the judiciary in this area is not very encouraging.

CONCLUSION
It is prima facie evident from the above legal arguments that capital punishment is a resort of the
last resort. It should be imposed only in exceptional circumstances strictly adhering the
guidelines of the Supreme Court of India through subsequent judgments discussed above. The
guilt of the accused should be proved beyond reasonable doubt and even in such cases, the
prosecutor must strongly establish, based on pristine evidence that the offender is a potential
threat to the society. The Judiciary in its wisdom and discretion must incline towards a
reformative and sympathetic approach towards criminals, but at the same time not allow any
hindrance or impediment in the administration of justice.

REFERENCES
Books referred:
1. Ratanlal & Dhirajlal's the Indian Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860) ,31st ed., reprint, enl. ed.
on a wider format by Y.V. Chandrachud
2. Administration of Criminal Justice : The Correctional Services :

Edited by N.K.

Chakrabarti, Deep, 1997, 1123 p, 5 Vols, ISBN : 81-7100-873-9


32 In V.K.Saxena v. State of U.P. (1983) 4 SCC 645 it was held that when one out of two
judges of the High Court in appeal differ on the point of guilt, the death sentence cannot be
restored. While it will be interesting to see if this helps Nalini in her review petition now
pending consideration before the Supreme Court, this is perhaps the first known instance of a
death sentence on a woman being confirmed and there being a dissenting opinion over it. The
earlier instances of Lichhama Devi (infra n.93) and Ram Shri (supra n.39 ) resulted in commuted
sentences.
16

Dictionary referred:
1. Garner, Bryan A. Ed., Blacks Law Dictionary, Seventh Edition (1999), West Group, St.
Paul
2. Rutherford, Leslie; Bone, S., Eds., Osborns Concise Law Dictionary, Eighth Edition
(Rep. 2003), Universal Law Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi

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